There are emails through June 13 discussing the drafting of
the EOS article.
Here's a brief update on
the EOS article.
The authors of
the EOS article note that a unified, global, high - resolution 3 - D map of the human fingerprint on Earth is within reach due to the remarkable lidar instruments, aerial photogrammetry, and satellite observations that are now available.
Bradley called the series «crap», and demanded it to be removed from Figure 2 in
the Eos article.
The authors of
the Eos article should their own forecast.
Also, a more useful perspective is found in the recent
EOS article by Mike Wallace, titled «Weather and Climate Extreme Events: Teachable Moments.»
Based on a relatively recent
EOS article setting forth the idea that it is not only SST but also the depth profile of the warming that effects hurricane strengthening in the Gulf, would it not be possible that additions Carribean heat content could warm the sea lower down, increasing intensity.
To learn how it works, please read this recent
Eos article by two seismologists, Ross Stein and Mark Stirling, who two years ago proposed a set of meetings, essentially a methodological smackdown, to try to resolve an intensifying division over how best to clarify and convey worst - case earthquake risks.
But I think that this controversy to a large extent is constructed out of thin air, an impression I feel is supported by Doran and Zimmermann's,
Eos article.
Not exact matches
Indeed, as described in that previous WSJ
article, a team of leading climate researchers detailed the numerous fundamental flaws in the Soon and Baliunas paper in in the American Geophysical Union journal «
Eos ``.
The Polar Pathfinders: Data Products and Science Plans,
Eos short
article and electronic journal publication, page 52, 78 (5)
If the writer of the
article has experience using neat clove
EO on children's gums with no ill effects, I would certainly be open to hearing about it.
This
article is a light - hearted and fun introduction to essential oils (
EOs).
Curious about Essential Oils (
EOs) and how to use them, read my previous
article.
CARB
EO # D -126-30
article source
While that might also make your head spin, in this
article, we'll find out why inventors have dumped $ 700 million into
EOS, why more investors are trying to get in, and how you can invest in it.
According to a recent
article in
Eos (Doran and Zimmermann, «Examining the Scientific consensus on Climate Change `, Volume 90, Number 3, 2009; p. 22 - 23 — only available for AGU members — update: a public link to the
article is here), about 58 % of the general public in the US thinks that human activity is a significant contributing factor in changing the mean global temperature, as opposed to 97 % of specialists surveyed.
Links to Doran and Zimmerman's
article in
Eos, as well as Zimmerman's thesis, can be found at Doran's website: http://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/home.htm
These claims were subsequently disputed in an
article in
Eos (Rahmstorf et al, 2004) by an international team of scientists and geologists (including some of us here at RealClimate), who suggested that Shaviv and Veizer's analyses were based on unreliable and poorly replicated estimates, selective adjustments of the data (shifting the data, in one case by 40 million years) and drew untenable conclusions, particularly with regard to the influence of anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations on recent warming (see for example the exchange between the two sets of authors).
When the initiative launched in 2013, the director Raj Pandya, wrote an
article for
Eos, the American Geophysical Union magazine, explaining the goal is «to enable communities to partner with Earth and space scientists and access the expertise needed to address problems arising from hazards, disasters, resource limitations, and climate change.»
With regards to the Dvorak scheme, I was astonished by the Wu
article in the December 06
EOS.
See this brief
article in
Eos Transactions for a comparison: / / www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2008/2008EO190001.
We discussed this broader view of the human role in the climate system in a recent
article in
EOS (where all of the authors are AGU Fellows):
Lovejoy, S., 2013:
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union Volume 94, Issue 1, 1 January 2013, Pages: 1 — 2, S. Lovejoy
Article first published online: 2 JAN 2013, DOI: 10.1002 / 2013EO010001.
Members receive the weekly newspaper
Eos and can order «multichoice» access to pdf's of AGU scientific
articles for about the price of iTunes song.
Susan's 2008
article in
Eos, «Improving How Scientists Communicate About Climate Change,» provides a brief summary of her advice to scientists.
And as an interesting
article in
EOS recently noted, humanity is affecting the very shape of Earth's surface in unprecedented ways.
«For example, see a recent
article debunked by the blog Watching the Deniers, where somebody had cherry - picked skeptical quotes from a few scientists who responded to the Doran and Zimmerman study (
Eos, January 20, 2009).
In a recent
article entitled «Can the Earth's Albedo and Surface Temperatures Increase Together,» that appeared in
EOS, Enric Palle and co-authors use recently released cloud data from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) to explain how it is possible for the Earth to be warming even as it's albedo is increasing.
The claims were disputed in an
article in
Eos, by an international team of scientists and geologists.
Our colleagues in the US recently authored an
article that examines the
EO and its consequences.
In this
article, we're going to go over some of the important and critical differences that
EOS plans to offer, as well as some concerns that the blockchain community has had about the project.
With that in mind,
EOS has appeared in various
articles in The New York Times and Reuters.